Château in Lossow, Germany, apparently destroyed and absent from recent maps.
Schloss Lossow was a château in Lossow, now part of Frankfurt (Oder) in Brandenburg, Germany. Historical images show it existed before 1913, but one source notes it no longer appears on recent maps and seems to have been destroyed. Wikidata identifies it as a château located in Lossow.
Schloss Lossow was a château in Lossow, a district of Frankfurt (Oder) in Germany. Wikidata identifies it as a château located in Lossow, and historical material about the district includes a pre-1913 view of the building. The available web content also notes that there is no castle on recent maps and suggests that it has probably been destroyed. Lossow lies about seven kilometres south of Frankfurt (Oder), around four kilometres east of Helenesee, and about 102 kilometres east of Berlin. The locality was first documented in 1328 and later belonged to several owners, including the families von Lossow, Rakow, von Beerfelde, and, from 1806, Carl Heinrich von Schöning. Before 1914, the estate came into the possession of Oberleutnant Siegfried Simon; around 1930 he was still recorded as lord of the Lossow estate, which then covered 1,834 hectares. At the end of the Second World War, Lossow was 35 percent destroyed. Because the only direct information here about Schloss Lossow itself is that it was a château in Lossow and appears in historical images before 1913, its detailed history, architecture, and fate are not explicitly described in the provided sources.